From The Grauniad

You could read The Grauniad for three years and not find a single thing worth reading in it (only snooty and/or juvenile opinion columns or articles pretending to be informative which are actually promotional pieces for the writer's book subedited to within an inch of their life ... mind you they do pay €0.15 a word) and then on one and the same day find three.

1. Black-browed babbler After last being sighted 180 years ago a Black-browed babbler has been found in Borneo. They captured it, but they didn't eat it or imprison it or keep it to do experiments on. They photographed it (with a 5,000 rupiah note for some reason) and then let it go again.
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2. Ruth Maddison The fascinating story of Melbourne photographer Ruth Maddison, 75, who left her job as Victoria’s first female builder’s labourer and turned to photography in 1975, aged 30. She's made a body of work about her father, notorious communist and peace activist Sam Goldbloom who was kept under surveillance by ASIO for 30 years.
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3. Orsola de Castro About the co-founder of a not-for-profit movement Fashion Revolution who is a kind of anti-Marie Kondo. She advocates “radical keeping”, not decluttering. “The only antidote to throwaway culture is to keep. So I am an obsessive keeper. “She advocates keeping 'a sacrificial lamb 'in your cupboard for moths – an old jumper or a ball of yarn in a fabric moths will love – that can get chewed in your wardrobe while other knits remain intact. “You will need to experiment on fabric,” De Castro says. “I don’t know if moths are regional, but camel wool does it for my moths. Shetland is another one – woo, do they love Shetland! I feed my moths like I feed my cats.”
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